Harold Aherne wrote:We've sometimes talked about the lost or missing features of the first decade of sound, but there are also at least some, and probably a good many, short films (including cartoons) from that time that are unaccounted for.
What started me wondering about this topic is the fact that several Oswald cartoons are cited on Wikipedia as being lost, including all six from 1938. Some MGM and most Warners subjects in 2-colour Technicolor are lost up to 1934, and I think one Bing Crosby 2-reeler from 1934 is missing its second reel. How many short films from the 30s would our experts in the field estimate to be lost, if such a guess is even possible? Are there any missing from the 40s or 50s?
-HA
It might be hard to figure, because so many short films of the 30's and 40's, even by the major studios, sit in studio vaults and have not been reissued or put in any general distribution in decades. Universal had been making a few new prints of some of their early 30's shorts like HELLO NAPOLEON (1931) with Lloyd Hamilton or various episodes of their early SHADOW series, but how many do they no longer have any sort of preservation material on? There are still a few hard to see Columbia titles, and we recently discussed here NTA's purchase of the Paramount shorts in the fifties may have had the positive effect of actually preserving a number of those titles.
As far as independent or smaller studio shorts, which there were many, there's probably quite a few missing. There's a number of early serials also that have seemingly dissapeared. The Harry Langdon Talkie Shorts that Arvid Gillstrom released through Paramount in 1933-34 are also currently considered missing. RKO-Pathe's short films are no longer owned by whomever owns RKO's features, and I believe there's some question as to where the original materials to those shorts are today.
In short, there are probably quite a few missing short films, certainly from the 1930's, but also from the 40's and 50's as well.
RICHARD M ROBERTS
